New species but many still unknown

A "T rex" leech with enormous teeth, a 6ft-long fruit-eating lizard and a glowing tree fungus are on a top 10 list of weird and wonderful new species that has been published by scientists.

Experts made the selection from thousands of plants, animals and microbes described for the first time last year to draw attention to the importance of conserving life on earth.

The fearsome leech Tyrannobdella rex has a mouthful of gigantic teeth, much like its namesake, the "king of dinosaurs" Tyrannosaurus rex.

Scientists discovered the bloodthirsty invertebrate when they pulled a 2in-long specimen from the nose of a girl in a remote region of Peru.

A somewhat more attractive example of a new species is the striking fruit-eating monitor lizard, Varanus bitatawa, from Luzon Island in The Philippines. At 6ft 6in in length, it has a blue-black body mottled with pale yellow-green dots and spends most of its time in trees.

Another large species on the top 10 list is Walter's duiker, Philantomba walteri, an antelope first encountered at a bushmeat market in West Africa.

At the other end of the size scale is an iron-eating bacterium found growing on the submerged wreck of the Titanic. Halomonas titanicae could provide a useful function in helping to dispose of sunken ships and oil rigs.

The list was compiled by experts at the International Institute for Species Exploration, based in Arizona State University in the US.

Its director, Dr Quentin Wheeler, said: "At the same time that astronomers search for earth-like planets in visible space, taxonomists are busily exploring the life forms of the most earth-like planet of all, our own."

Details of the top 10 species of 2010 were published on Arizona State University's website on the 304th anniversary of the birth of Swedish botanist Carolus Linnaeus.